CFP: 1913 / the art of noises / 2013

University College Cork, 13 December 2013.

The year 1913 was a momentous one in art. From Proust to Stravinsky, Duchamp to Malevitch, Modernism was to recalibrate the way the world was seen; Futurism offered to change the way the world was heard. One hundred
years ago, Luigi Russolo published his manifesto, L’arte dei Rumori (The Art of Noises), announcing a new way not only of conceiving music but also how we would hear the world around us. In the future, noises would be the material of music. Russolo’s manifesto, and his strange intonarumori devices, have been fantastically influential in the intervening century, and this event seeks to capture some of those connections, in both discursive and performative modes.

Possible themes: New sounds; new instruments; celebration of speed, war, or the modern city in music, visual art and poetry; Futurist manifestos; music and sound art; connections to other artworks and artists in 1913; influences of Futurism in music and other arts.

Proposals are invited for papers on any of the suggested themes, in the form of an abstract or outline of not more than 300 words.  Proposals are also invited for art works – especially performances, installations, sound sculptures, compositions which are specifically designed to address the themes suggested. The proposal should outline the projected artwork, and should be accompanied by an abstract of not more than 300 words that details the relationship of the work to the themes of the symposium. The proposer will be responsible for supplying all equipment/special resources required for the creation or display/performance of any accepted proposal.

Please send your proposal by 5pm, October 31st by email to phegarty@french.ucc.ie. The selection panel will meet as soon after this date as possible and inform selected contributors forthwith.

CAESURA #17

Artisan Bar, 35 London Rd.,  Edinburgh, EH7 5BQ. Friday, 11 October 2013, 19:00.

ALEC FINLAY

Alec Finlay is an artist & poet based in Edinburgh. He has adopted such innovative poetic forms such as the mesostic, embedded-poem, and circle-poem. Recent poetic works include today today today (Playspace, 2013), A Company of Mountains (morning star, 2013) Be My Reader (Shearsman, 2012), Question Your Teaspoons (Calder Wood Press, 2012) Mesostic Remedy (morning star, 2009), Mesostic Interleaved (morning star & The University of Edinburgh, 2009), and Says You (Oystercatcher Press, 2009). Finlay established morning star in 1990, a press specialising in collaborations between artists and poets, including the award-winning pocketbooks series (1999–2002). He has published over twenty books and has won two Scottish Design Awards. In 2010 Finlay was shortlisted for the Northern Art Prize. He blogs regularly at www.alecfinlay.com.

SAMANTHA WALTON

Samantha Walton: has published — Amaranth Unstitched (Punch Press), City Break Weekend Songs (Critical Documents), tristanundisolde (Arthur Shilling Press); co-organises the techno-poetry night Syndicate; most recently published in/on — Black Box Manifold / Veersomes / Hi Zero / Archive of the Now; working on a book about madness, law and crime fiction (not bloody poetry).

JAMES OATES

James Oates has gained a reputation in the North of England for quality performances on the poetry circuit for over 25 years, more recently gaining the accolade of being one of the most consistently dynamic performers of poetry in the North today. This culminated recently in his representation of the North East in the 2009 Radio 4 Poetry Slam Semi-finals. He won the ‘East Durham Writer of the Year’ competition in 1997 in the
Prose (Open) category and has been featured on Amazing Radio. James had his first full Poetry collection published in 2007 (Wideyback) by Red Squirrel Press and has several pamphlet publications by other publishers.

Poetry at The Sutton Gallery

The Sutton Gallery, 18a Dundas Street, Edinburgh, EH3 6HZ. Monday, 30th September, 19:00.

Join us for an evening of poetry at The Sutton Gallery on Monday 30th September from 7pm. There will be wine and other refreshments available and there will also be a last minute chance to look at works by Peter Standen and Yoshishige Furukawa in the gallery. And it’s all absolutely free.

MacGillivray is a Scottish writer and artist. As a musician she has supported The Fall, Arthur Brown and Arlo Guthrie, performed internationally as well as being featured on BBC Radio 3 Late Junction and The Verb. Her third album Horse Sweat Chandelier is released October 2013. MacGillivray’s poetry has been published in ASLS New Scottish Writing and Magma; her art criticism in Performance Research and several editions of Art Monthly. She has performed alongside writers such as Alan Moore, Don Paterson, Brian Catling and Iain Sinclair. Her first collection, Last Wolf of Scotland will be published in October 2013 and treads a fine line between surreal reality and imaginative abstraction, in order to trace the violence through which national mythologies are forged and perpetuated, from the wilderness of the Scottish Highlands to the piratical showmanship of the wild west. http://www.kirstennorrie.com/

Andrew Spragg is a poet and critic. He was born in London and lives there currently. His books include The Fleetingest (Red Ceiling Press, 2011), Notes for Fatty Cakes (Anything Anymore Anywhere, 2011), cut out (Dept Press, 2012), To Blart & Kid (Like This Press, 2013) and A Treatise on Disaster (Contraband Books, 2013). His writing was also included in Dear World & Everyone In It: New Poetry in the UK (Bloodaxe, 2013). http://www.archiveofthenow.org/authors/?i=138

summer stock

Summer stock, lit journal for humanimals:

  • Tim Atkins
  • Sean Bonney
  • Paul Buck
  • Becky Cremin
  • Laura Foster Twigg
  • Steven Fowler/Tim Atkins
  • Chris Gutkind
  • Alan Hay
  • Jeff Hilson
  • Peter Jaeger
  • Tom Jenks
  • Antony John
  • Sarah Kelley
  • David Kelly
  • Fabian Macpherson
  • Sophie Mayer
  • Richard Parker
  • Jessica Pujol
  • Nat Raha
  • Connie Scozzaro
  • Marcus Slease
  • Linus Slug
  • James Wilkes
  • Steve Willey

FOSTER-M / JUXTAVOICES

image001

Fri September 27th, 2013
7.30pm prompt start: £ Free
Snig Hill Gallery
24 Snig Hill Sheffield S3 8NB

Sheffield’s own antichoir Juxtavoices is now in it’s third year of surprising both itself and its audience in locations across the region.

We’re delighted to be performing (30 minutes 7.30pm – 8.00pm ) on the opening night of Foster-M’s latest solo art show in Sheffield.

Foster-m is a Sheffield (united kingdom) born artist. Working out of his F28b studio based in a disused machine factory in the old industrial part of the city. Using mixed media, not just on canvas but on any materials he can salvage or reclaim from his surrounding environment, wood, boards, old shop signs, roofing-felt, concrete sheets and numerous found objects. Having been brought up on the notorious KELVIN FLATS COMPLEX his works portray a cold alienation and social estrangement, so at first glance his paintings come across as violent, dark, self-destructive, full of chaotic lines, decaying figures, coded symbols and abstract texts which he refers to as primitive metaphors. But scratch the surface of the multi-layered work and you start to unlock a real warmth, a brutally honest social comment on his life and hostile environment, a life he describes as in isolation. You would expect this vision to leave you stone cold but that’s the great appeal to this artist and his work. …

Charlie Sayzz

A twitter haiku poem made from Iraq/Afghanistan war reportage, intercut with quotes from cult leader Charles Manson, will tweet 1st Oct onwards from: https://twitter.com/CharlieSayzz

The poem draws comparisons between psychopathology and foreign policy.

“An American nightmare, with its condensation of Holy Spirit + Charles Manson + War + haiku (a Japanese form that could recall of course another war)… Another voice among the voices, a way to explore trauma… Poetry should do this.” (Steve Giasson)

Charlie Sayzz is constructed from incorrect 18-syllable haiku, to be transmitted one per day for the next year. The haiku is a much-abused and appropriated short (17-syllable) Japanese form, often meditative and peaceful. It is chosen here for its very in-appropriateness as a vehicle for war poetry. And yet under the placid surface, haiku surely is angry, because it is now such a colonised poetry. The extra syllable in these ‘bad’ haiku is to create dissonance (in old numerology, 9 is the number of aggression; 18 syllables = 1+8 = 9).

The poem was devised by Philip Davenport and co-written by him with Richard Barrett, Steve Giasson, Tom Jenks, Michael Leong, copland smith and Steve Waling.  Tom Jenks programmed the twitter feed and shaped many of the verses as visual poems.

This project is a parallel to Davenport’s novel Charlie Says (2013)

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Charlie-Says-ebook/dp/B00DDU1R6A

 

The British Onion Marketing Board

In a secondment funded by the European Union, Chris McCabe and Tom Jenks have been charged with overhauling the site of the British Onion Marketing Board, with the aim of raising its public profile and introducing the British onion into public discourse. Selections from their work will be presented at the Camaradefest in London on 25th October, where both parties will be on hand to answer questions and make recipe suggestions.

Camaradefest

October 26th 2013 , 2pm to 10pm ​​at the Rich Mix arts centre, Bethnal Green, London.

The Camarade poetry festival is a unique and unforgettable one day explosion of dynamic collaboration in contemporary avant garde and literary poetics. 100 poets align in 50 pairs, each writing an original collaborative work, written specifically for the festival and premiered on the day. The 5th Camarade event, and the crescendo of the Enemies project’s first year, this ambitious exploration of the possibilities of collaboration in poetry will evidence the true width and depth of poetry that is happening now.

2pm – Session 1

Jeff Hilson & Fabian MacPherson
David Berridge & Mary Paterson
Chrissy Williams & Nia Davies
Ben Stainton & Nathan Hamilton
Giles Goodland & Alistair Noon
Sarah Crewe & Jo Langdon
Marek Kazmierski &Wioletta Grzegorzewska
Matt Dalby & Steven Waling
Tom Chivers & Ross Sutherland
/ 3.30pm – Session 2
Marcus Slease & Claire Potter
Rhy Trimble & Harry Gilonis
Bea Colley & Francine Elena
Ekaterina Paronian & Sophie Mayer
Pascal O’Laughlin & Scott Thurston
Joel Shea & Ricardo Marques
Mendoza & Nat Raha
Andy Spragg & Joe Kennedy
Robert Sheppard & Robert Hampson
/ 5pm – Session 3
Ahren Warner & Mark Waldron
Matthew Gregory & Robert Herbert
​Julia Bird & ​Sarah Hesketh
Becky Cremin & Ryan Ormonde
Stephen Watts & Will Rowe
Zoe Skoulding & Ondrej Buddeus
Kirsty Irving & Jon Stone
Nathan Jones & Sam Skinner
Oli Hazzard & Caleb Klaces
/ 7.30pm – Session 4
Carol Watts & George Szirtes
Tim Atkins & Jessica Pujol I Duran
Ryan Van Winkle & William Letford
Jack Underwood & Alex MacDonald
Joanna Rzadkowska & Kristen Kreider
Stephen Connolly & Emily Hasler
Sophie Collins & Rachael Allen
Deborah Pearson & Tamarin Norwood
Sarah Kelly & Gabriele Lebanauskaite
/ 9pm – Session 5
Holly Pester & Emma Bennett
Sam Riviere & Joe Dunthorne
Ollie Evans & Robert Kiely
Christodoulos Makris & Kim Campanello
Reza Mohammedi & Ana Seferovic
James Davies & Philip Terry
James Byrne & Sandeep Parmar
Chris McCabe & Tom Jenks

Electronic Voice Phenomena at Bournemouth Arts Festival

Friday 27 September 2013

Start time: 7.30pm
Tickets: £7

Book online

The Shelley Theatre

Boscombe Manor
Bournemouth BH5 1LX

Website: artsbournemouth.org.uk

Part séance, part avant-garde cabaret, Electronic Voice Phenomena is an experimental literature, performance and music show that feeds on the corpse of paranormal pseudo-science. The programme of original commissions takes its inspiration from Konstantin Raudive’s notorious ‘Breakthrough’ experiments of the 1970s, where he captured voices-from-beyond in electronic noise. Wickedly funny spoken word artist Ross Sutherland finds himself trapped in The Crystal Maze; sound poet Hannah Silva channels ghostly utterances; electronic music maverick Leafcutter John tunes in to hidden energy fields; all held together by your Dadaist anti-host, the experimental poet SJ Fowler

Featuring
ROSS SUTHERLAND / HANNAH SILVA / SJ FOWLER

with special guest
LEAFCUTTER JOHN

Syndicate 7: NANO

Inspace, 1 Crichton Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9AB. Thursday, 19 September 2013, 18:45.

Technology isn’t just changing the way poetry is produced and disseminated, and it isn’t just creating new media forms for poets to colonise. It’s also creating a context in which many techniques characteristic of experimental poetic practice have become commonplace. Join us as Syndicate curates a series of live performances, installations and dialogues at the raw intersection of avant-garde poetics, technology and cyberculture.

Performing tonight:: Sandra Alland / Steve Willey / Ian Davidson

WHO::

Sandra Alland is a writer, filmmaker, interdisciplinary artist and performer. She has published and presented her work throughout the UK, Europe, the US and Canada. In 2009, Edinburgh’s Forest Publications published Sandra’s chapbook of short fiction, Here’s To Wang, which went into its second printing in 2010. Sandra has published three books of poetry: Naturally Speaking (Toronto: espresso, 2012); Blissful Times (Toronto: BookThug, 2007); and Proof of a Tongue (Toronto: McGilligan, 2004). Sandra curates Cachín Cachán Cachunga Queer & Trans* Cabaret in Edinburgh, and was recently guest editor at Jacket2 for a special issue on Scottish poets. http://www.blissfultimes.ca.

Steve Willey lives in Whitechapel, London. His poetry has been widely anthologized including in: Dear World and Everyone In It (Bloodaxe, 2013); Better Than Language (Ganzfeld press, 2011); and City State (Penned In The Margins, 2009). His long-form poem Elegy (his debut collection) was published by Veer Books in July 2013, but you can’t get it yet. Steve enjoys working collaboratively and across different media, and in the past he has worked with the composer Edward Nesbit and the post-rock band Rumour Cubes on pieces that have been performed at the Wigmore Hall and at Glastonbury Music Festival respectively. Steve’s current poetic projects derive from a trip he took to Aida Refugee Camp in 2009, and a further visit in August 2013. He holds a PhD on the subject of Bob Cobbing 1950-1978: Poetry, Performance and the Institution, from Queen Mary, University of London. With Tom Bamford he runs the Benefits event series in London, and he is happy to be contacted via http://www.stevewilley.com.

Ian Davidson’s latest poetry collection, Partly in Riga (Shearsman 2010) was mostly written while on a residency in Latvia. His current project explores the ways that practices and ideas of movement and mobility, particularly those of humans, relate to contemporary writing. He has made extensive use of a seven syllable line, a quantity that always seems incomplete, and see the pamphlet Into Thick Hair (Wild Honey 2011) for an example. Other poetry collections include Harsh (Spectacular Diseases 2003), As if Only (Shearsman 2007) and At a Stretch (Shearsman 2004), and critical books include Ideas of Space in Contemporary Poetry (Palgrave 2007) and Radical Spaces of Poetry (Palgrave 2010).

Expect:: Innovative poetics, multi-media artworks, interactive performances, lively debate and sparkling wine.

About:: Syndicate is a unique initiative bringing together writers, musicians, artists and researchers working with and in response to digital technologies, new media and evolving network practices. It is organised by Lila Matsumoto, Jo L. Walton and Samantha Walton in collaboration with Inspace and with the support of the Edinburgh Fund’s Innovative Initiative Grant.

Caesura #16

Friday, 13 September 2013, 19:00. Artisan Bar, 35 London Rd, Edinburgh, EH7 5BQ.

Description Bespoke spoken word performances at Edinburgh’s monthly night of racketeers and raconteurs, experiments and experience, synapses and sounds. Avante-jive for the masses.

This month we’re back at the Arty with a very special line-up and some exclusive collaborations. Featuring:

SJ FOWLER

SJ Fowler is a poet, artist, martial artist & vanguardist living in London. He’s published 4 books of poetry and has had works commissioned by the Tate, the London Sinfonietta, Mercy and Penned in the Margins. He is poetry editor of 3am magazine and curator of the Enemies project.
www.sjfowlerpoetry.com

TOM JENKS

Tom Jenks has published three collections with if p then q: A Priori (2008), * (2010), and items, a 1000 fragment verbivocovisual sequence, published in 2013. He co-organises The Other Room reading series and administers the avant objects imprint zimZalla. He has written four collaborations with Chris McCabe for SJ Fowler’s Camarade project. Recent publications include slugs/snails and An Anatomy of Melancholy. A 100 poem sequence with accompanying visuals, streak artefacts, has just been published by Department Press. He is a PhD student at Edge Hill University, where he is researching digital technology and innovative poetry.
www.zshboo.org

ROB A. MACKENZIE

Rob A Mackenzie was born in Glasgow and lives in Leith. His second full collection, The Good News, was published in April 2013 by Salt. His first, The Opposite of Cabbage, appeared in 2009. He has also published a couple of pamphlets. He is reviews editor for Magma Poetry magazine and has been a supporter of live poetry.for several years, founding the legendary Poetry At The… reading series in Edinburgh which ran from 2006-2011. His blog, Surroundings, was possibly the most popular poetry blog in the UK for at least 10 minutes, sometime around 2009.
http://robmack.blogspot.co.uk/

HAL DUNCAN

Hal Duncan’s VELLUM was nominated for the World Fantasy Award, and won the Spectrum, Kurd Lasswitz and Tähtivaeltaja. Along with the sequel, INK, other publications include the novella ESCAPE FROM HELL!, the chapbook AN A-Z OF THE FANTASTIC CITY, and a poetry collection, SONGS FOR THE DEVIL AND DEATH, with a short story collection forthcoming from Lethe Press. He wrote the lyrics for Aereogramme’s “If You Love Me, You’d Destroy Me” and the musical, NOWHERE TOWN. Homophobic hatemail once dubbed him “THE…. Sodomite Hal Duncan!!” (sic.) You can find him online at http://www.halduncan.com, revelling in that role.
www.halduncan.com